Aristotle's concept that the goal of life is happiness and it's to be achieved through reaching one's full potential

Friday, February 13, 2015

The Somewhere-by-the-Sea Salon

So how does this grab you – how about a monthly Salon-ish
gathering that is part book club, part film club, part supper club, part
cultural get together? I’m thinking this could be a real-world group
with a virtual component – like we could establish a Facebook group so that
friends who are far away could participate in book and film discussions, but
friends who are local could meet monthly and maybe take some trips to local
museums and cultural sites. Our monthly meetings could be a supper club of
sorts too, where we could enjoy anything from light refreshments to
multi-course meals – maybe even something that relates to our book club selection, or we would just order Chinese or Thai -- or something else.

I would love
to host this soiree, though it wouldn’t have to be always at my house – but I
do want to set the expectation of what kind of things I would want to read and
watch. On the sidebar of this blog are lists of
books I read between 2007 and 2010, to give you an idea of the type of book I'd like to keep reading. Please take a look and decide if we share a similar taste. The book selections can be old or new – I don’t care which. The size of
the group doesn’t have to be set – people may want to pop in and out sporadically,
depending on their interest in the books and films we’ll discuss and I hope we have both men and women. I would love
it if the group included family, friends and neighbors from all over, even if
you don’t participate much.

How would that be, hmm? Would you be interested? Shall I add you to the Somewhere-by-the-Sea Salon Facebook Group? Let's see where this goes!

6 comments:

A blog post! from you! It's been years! Wow, yes, of course, I'm interested. Please add me to the group. PS-Naturally, I'm overloaded with reading projects at the moment but I want to be a part of this!

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Literary Quote

It is worth mentioning, for future reference, that the creative power which bubbles so pleasantly in beginning a new book quiets down after a time, and one goes on more steadily. Doubts creep in. Then one becomes resigned. Determination not to give in, and the sense of an impending shape keep one at it more than anything.